Language of Mathematics
Mathematics has its own language - a precise vocabulary (sum, difference, product, quotient, factor, perimeter), a system of symbols (+, =, <, the digits, the place-value notation) and its own conventions for reading and writing. Many learning difficulties are really language difficulties: a child may compute correctly but stumble on a word problem because words like 'altogether', 'left', 'share equally' or 'twice' carry mathematical meaning. Everyday language can also collide with mathematical language - 'volume' means loudness at home but capacity in maths; 'or' is exclusive in conversation but inclusive in mathematics; 'difference' simply means 'not the same' in daily speech but means subtraction here. Good teaching deliberately bridges the two: it starts from the child's home language and informal words, introduces formal vocabulary and symbols gradually with concrete referents, and gives children practice in reading mathematical statements and writing/explaining their reasoning. Verbalising and writing about mathematics is itself a way of clarifying thought, which is why CTET favours discussion and explanation over silent drill.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
NCF 2005 vision of school mathematics
| Higher aim | Mathematisation of the child's thought - reasoning, abstraction, proof |
|---|---|
| Narrow aim | Useful numeracy - the four operations and measurement for daily life |
| Core problem | Fear of and failure in mathematics; meaningless rote learning |
| For all | Mathematics for every child, not only the talented few |
Values / aims of teaching mathematics
| Utilitarian (practical) | Counting, money, time, measurement - everyday usefulness |
|---|---|
| Disciplinary (intellectual) | Trains logical, precise, systematic reasoning |
| Cultural | Maths as human heritage - Aryabhata, zero, place value |
| Social / aesthetic | Patterns, symmetry, beauty; a shared social language |